Series 65 / IAR Registration · California
Series 65 in California: Registration Requirements
Everything you need to register as an Investment Adviser Representative (IAR) in California: which exam qualifies, fees, financial requirements, and whether your professional
designation can waive the Series 65. New to the exam? Start with what the Series 65 actually covers or our step-by-step IAR registration guide.
Credential Waivers in California
California waives the Series 65 exam for IAR applicants who hold one of the following credentials in good standing:
- CFP
- CFA
- ChFC
- PFS
- CIC
California accepts the standard NASAA waiver set for IARs holding a CFP, CFA, ChFC, PFS, or CIC in good standing.
See our full guide to Series 65 exam waivers (CFP, CFA, ChFC, PFS, CIC) for the credential-by-credential rules and how to file.
California IAR Registration at a Glance
- Qualifying Exam
- Series 65 or Series 66 (with Series 7)
- Registration Fee
- $50
- Annual Renewal
- $50
- Continuing Education
- 12 credits annual
- Surety Bond firm-level
- Not required
- Net Worth Requirement firm-level
- $10,000 for IA firms with custody / discretion
- Filing Method
- IARD + state
- De Minimis Exemption
- Up to 5 clients / 12 mo
- State vs SEC AUM Threshold firm-level
- $100M ($100M federal default)
- Prior-Registration Reciprocity
- 2-year window from prior IAR registration
IARD Renewal Window
IAR registration in California is renewed annually through the IARD system on the same cycle every state uses:
- Early November: Preliminary renewal statements post on FINRA Gateway.
- Early December: Preliminary statement payment deadline (early December each year; submit a few days before to allow processing).
- January 1: Registrations not funded by the December deadline are terminated for the new year.
- Early January: Final renewal statements post, reflecting any post-deadline changes.
- Late January: Final statement payment deadline.
Exact 2026/2027 dates are published in the annual IARD Renewal Bulletin. Verify current dates at iard.com/renewal-program.
What's Specific to California
- California accepts either the Series 65 or the Series 66 (paired with the Series 7).
- IAR CE: 12 credits per year (6 Products & Practices + 6 Ethics); California adopted the NASAA model rule effective 2024.
- IAR registration fee is $50 (effective July 1, 2025); the firm-level annual notice fee is $125.
- Investment adviser firms with custody or discretion must maintain a $10,000 minimum net worth (firm-level requirement).
- California maintains its own state registration system in addition to filing through IARD.
Last verified: 2026-05-05
Which exam do I need for IAR registration in California?
California accepts the Series 65 or Series 66 (with Series 7). California also waives the exam for holders of these credentials in good standing: CFP, CFA, ChFC, PFS, CIC.
Does California waive the Series 65 for CFP holders?
Yes. California waives the Series 65 for active CFP holders in good standing. California accepts the standard NASAA waiver set for IARs holding a CFP, CFA, ChFC, PFS, or CIC in good standing.
What does it cost to register as an IAR in California?
California's IAR registration fee is $50 with a renewal fee of $50. Additional IARD system fees apply at the federal level. Annual renewal runs through IARD: preliminary statements post in early November, payment is due in early December, and final statements are reconciled in late January.
Does California require continuing education for IARs?
Yes. California requires 12 IAR CE credits annual (6 Products & Practices + 6 Ethics & Professional Responsibility) under the NASAA model rule.
How many California clients can an out-of-state adviser have without registering?
Up to 5 California clients in any rolling 12-month period, provided the adviser has no place of business in California. California follows the NSMIA federal standard: an out-of-state adviser with no place of business in California and fewer than six clients who are California residents in the previous 12 months is exempt from licensure.
Does prior registration in another state qualify me for California's exam waiver?
Yes. California exempts applicants who have been actively registered as an IAR in another U.S. jurisdiction within the past 2 years. The reciprocity does not apply if your registration has lapsed beyond that window.
When does an IA firm based in California have to register with the SEC instead of the state?
California follows the standard federal "mid-sized adviser" rule: state-registered up to $100M RAUM, must register with the SEC at $110M, and may stay state-registered until dropping below $90M after SEC registration.
Sources & Verification
This page was last verified on 2026-05-05. Fees, CE, and waiver rules change. Always confirm with the regulator before relying on these figures for an actual filing.
- Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI): https://dfpi.ca.gov/
- NASAA (exam waivers, IAR CE model rule, and state IA registration index): nasaa.org/industry-resources/investment-advisers
- IARD (annual renewal program and bulletin): iard.com/renewal-program